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630f7f0f87
Not a huge improvement, but things are slightly more organized, and there's a splash of color in the form of a border around the text describing the format of code and data lines. Added an "IsConstant" property to Symbol.
561 lines
25 KiB
C#
561 lines
25 KiB
C#
/*
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* Copyright 2019 faddenSoft
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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* limitations under the License.
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*/
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using System;
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using System.Collections;
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using System.Collections.Generic;
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using System.Diagnostics;
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using Asm65;
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/*
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A few words about by-value lookups of external addresses.
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We guarantee that symbol labels are unique, but multiple symbols can have the same value.
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This becomes interesting when we're trying to match external address references to symbols
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defined in a platform file or the project properties. It becomes especially interesting
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when the symbols have widths larger than 1, and partially overlap each other.
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For deterministic behavior it's necessary to define a priority order in event of overlap.
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The basic rules for determining the symbol associated with a given address are:
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1. Newer platform symbol definitions replace older definitions, at file granularity.
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2. As an extension of rule #1, project symbols override platform symbols.
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3. User symbols override both platform and project symbols. They can't overlap by value,
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since one is internal and the others are external, but if a user symbol's label matches
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a project/platform symbol, the project/platform symbol will be hidden.
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4. If two multi-byte symbol definitions overlap, we use whichever was defined closest
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to the actual address while still appearing before it. So if we have FOO=$2000/10 and
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BAR=$2005/10, $2004 would be FOO and $2005 would be BAR. (Note this can only happen for
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two symbols inside the same platform file or in the project symbol definitions; otherwise
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one of the previous rules would have determined it.)
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5. If everything else is equal, e.g. we have FOO=$2000 and BAR=$2000 in the same file,
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the winner is determined alphabetically. (We don't track symbol definition line numbers,
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and there's no definite order in project properties, so there's not much else to do.)
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Working through the math on every access could get painful, so we create a dictionary with
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the value as the key, and add symbols to it as we work our way through that platform and
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project files. Every address is represented, so a symbol with a width of 10 would have 10
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entries in the dictionary. If we're adding a symbol at an address that already has an entry,
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we do a priority check, and either leave it alone or replace it with the new value.
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For 8-bit code it would be slightly more efficient to use a 64K array representing all of
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memory, but that doesn't scale for 65816. That said, we probably want to break it up by
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bank anyway to allow for partial updates.
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It's worth noting that the only public by-address interface is the find-by-address method.
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Everything is done by symbol or label, and the by-address stuff happens behind the scenes.
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-----
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A few words about I/O direction.
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Some memory-mapped I/O locations have different behavior when read than they do when written.
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For example, on later models of the Apple II, reading from $C000 returns the last key hit,
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while writing to $C000 disables 80-column mode. When doing an external address lookup, we
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may need to know what sort of access is happening.
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We need to be able to define independent symbols for reading and writing, which means either
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having two separate address lookup tables, or one table with two references per entry. If
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we use an array of structs as our table, having two refs per entry is efficient. If we use
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a collection class like Dictionary, two refs per entry requires allocating an additional
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object to hold the object pair, so it's more memory efficient to have two separate dictionaries.
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However, separate data structures means double the dictionary lookups (which are O(1) in an
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unsorted Dictionary).
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Not all instructions perform an access. For example, JSR doesn't immediately read from the
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location, it just sets the program counter. On the 65816, instructions like PEA take an
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address, but don't cause any access at all. We can't generally know what's coming next, so
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for access type "none" we try Read then Write.
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-----
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A few words about address masks.
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On the Atari 2600, you can access registers, RAM, and ROM from multiple addresses. For
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example, the first TIA register can be accessed at $0000, $0040, $0100, $0140, and so on,
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but only in "even" 4K pages ($0000, $2000, $4000, ...). Because the underlying hardware is
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just watching for specific values on certain address lines, the set of matching addresses can
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be described with a pair of bit masks. We need one more mask to define which address bits
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are used to select a specific register.
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The question is how to handle a by-address lookup here. There are two basic approaches:
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1. Add all possibly matching addresses to the dictionary.
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2. Maintain a separate list of masked symbols, and match against those in a separate step.
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Option #1 makes adding a symbol expensive, but lookups very cheap. We have to add
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potentially thousands of entries to the dictionary for each masked symbol. When we want
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to look up a symbol, though, we just check the entry for the address.
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Option #2 makes adding a symbol cheap, but lookups are inconsistent with the established rules.
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The problem arises if a masked symbol overlaps with a non-masked symbol. If we want the priority
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to work the way we described earlier, some non-masked symbols might have priority over a given
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masked symbol while others don't.
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v---------
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It's possible to mitigate the problems of both with a hybrid approach:
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- Non-masked symbols get added to the dictionary as usual.
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- Masked symbols are compared to all existing dictionary entries. If the mask matches, the
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existing entry is kept or replaced according to the usual rules.
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- On lookup-by-value, we check for a match in the dictionary. If we don't find one, we
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test it against all masked values.
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We still have to iterate for each masked symbol, but only over the set of non-masked symbols
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rather than an entire bank (or more... need to define what masking means for 16-bit code),
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and we don't have to create any new entries.
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We can improve the lookup speed by keeping the symbols grouped by CompareMask/CompareValue. If
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the test fails we can ignore all symbols in the group. If more than one symbol has the same
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value (after being masked with AddressMask), we replace symbols in priority order.
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The behavior when two masked groups overlap is somewhat unspecified, especially if we combine
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symbols with identical mask sets. We could set the mask set to ABC, define symbols, switch
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to DEF, define symbols, then switch back to ABC and define more symbols. If ABC is a subset
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of DEF, it's possible that symbols are defined in the third set that should replace symbols
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in the second set. But because ABC was defined first, an ordered list would check DEF for a
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match before checking ABC. (I'm pretty comfortable with declaring that the behavior of
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overlapping mask sets is undefined... if it's ambiguous to the hardware, I'm just not going
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to worry about it.)
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---------^
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I think approach #2 is entirely reasonable. Make masked lookups the lowest priority, so
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that specific overrides can be defined in the usual way. The masked symbols catch anything
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that falls through the cracks. We can revisit this if there turns out to be an interesting
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use case that justifies the additional work.
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All of the above must be done twice for ReadWrite symbols, once per direction.
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-----
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A few words about updating the by-address table.
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The previous notes were largely concerned with populating the table. We also need to worry
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about updating the table when new entries are added, edited, or removed. We want, whenever,
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possible, to avoid updating the entire table.
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The troubles arise when we remove an entry, or we add/edit an entry with a label that conflicts
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with another entry, effectively adding or removing the conflicting symbol. Because of the
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layered approach we use, it's sometimes necessary to regenerate the by-address table from the
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contents of the by-label table. For example, if we have a platform symbol named "FOO" with a
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width of 10, and we create a user label named "FOO", the platform symbol disappears completely.
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Overlapping symbols that had been hidden due to lower priority must be restored.
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We could reduce the update cost by making each table entry a priority-ordered list of symbols.
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I'm expecting conflicts to be rare in practice, so no need to worry about this yet.
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*/
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namespace SourceGen {
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/// <summary>
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/// List of all symbols, arranged primarily by label, but also accessible by value. All
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/// symbols have a unique label.
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/// </summary>
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public class SymbolTable : IEnumerable<Symbol> {
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/// <summary>
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/// Primary storage. Provides fast lookup by label. The StringComparer we choose
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/// determines how case sensitivity and Culture is handled.
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private SortedList<string, Symbol> mSymbols =
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new SortedList<string, Symbol>(Asm65.Label.LABEL_COMPARER);
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/// <summary>
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/// By-address lookup table. Because symbols can span more than one byte, there may
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/// be more than one entry per symbol here. If two symbols cover the same address,
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/// only the highest-priority symbol is kept, so not all symbols are represented here.
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///
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/// This does not contain constants or local variables.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// For efficiency on larger data files, we may want to break this up by bank. That
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/// way we can do a partial update.
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/// </remarks>
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private Dictionary<int, Symbol> mSymbolsByReadAddress = new Dictionary<int, Symbol>();
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private Dictionary<int, Symbol> mSymbolsByWriteAddress = new Dictionary<int, Symbol>();
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/// <summary>
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/// Container for a collection of symbols that share a common mask definition.
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/// </summary>
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private class MaskGroup {
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private DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask mMultiMask;
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// Keyed by minimal address, not canonical address.
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private Dictionary<int, DefSymbol> mByReadAddress = new Dictionary<int, DefSymbol>();
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private Dictionary<int, DefSymbol> mByWriteAddress = new Dictionary<int, DefSymbol>();
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public MaskGroup(DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask multiMask) {
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Debug.Assert(multiMask != null);
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mMultiMask = multiMask;
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}
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public void Add(DefSymbol defSym) {
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bool doRead = true;
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bool doWrite = true;
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if (defSym.Direction == DefSymbol.DirectionFlags.Read) {
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doWrite = false;
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} else if (defSym.Direction == DefSymbol.DirectionFlags.Write) {
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doRead = false;
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}
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for (int i = 0; i < defSym.DataDescriptor.Length; i++) {
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// See if there's already something here. If we reach the end of the
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// bank, wrap around.
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int addr = (defSym.Value & 0xff0000) + ((defSym.Value + i) & 0xffff);
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addr &= mMultiMask.AddressMask; // use minimal address
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DefSymbol curSym;
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if (doRead) {
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mByReadAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out curSym);
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mByReadAddress[addr] = (curSym == null) ? defSym :
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(DefSymbol)HighestPriority(defSym, curSym);
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}
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if (doWrite) {
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mByWriteAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out curSym);
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mByWriteAddress[addr] = (curSym == null) ? defSym :
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(DefSymbol)HighestPriority(defSym, curSym);
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}
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}
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}
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public DefSymbol Find(int addr, bool tryRead, bool tryWrite) {
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addr &= mMultiMask.AddressMask;
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DefSymbol defSym;
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if (tryRead && mByReadAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out defSym)) {
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return defSym;
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}
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if (tryWrite && mByWriteAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out defSym)) {
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return defSym;
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}
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return null;
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}
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Collection of MaskGroups.
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/// </summary>
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private Dictionary<DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask, MaskGroup> mMaskGroups =
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new Dictionary<DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask, MaskGroup>();
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/// <summary>
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/// Constructor.
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/// </summary>
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public SymbolTable() { }
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// IEnumerable
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public IEnumerator<Symbol> GetEnumerator() {
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// .Values is documented as O(1)
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return mSymbols.Values.GetEnumerator();
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}
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// IEnumerable
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IEnumerator IEnumerable.GetEnumerator() {
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return mSymbols.Values.GetEnumerator();
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Clears the symbol table.
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/// </summary>
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public void Clear() {
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mSymbols.Clear();
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mSymbolsByReadAddress.Clear();
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mSymbolsByWriteAddress.Clear();
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Returns the number of symbols in the table.
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/// </summary>
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public int Count() {
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return mSymbols.Count;
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Adds the specified symbol to the list. Throws an exception if the symbol is
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/// already present.
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/// </summary>
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public void Add(Symbol sym) {
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// If Symbol with matching label is in list, this will throw an exception,
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// and the by-value add won't happen.
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mSymbols.Add(sym.Label, sym);
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AddAddressTableEntry(sym);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// get: Finds the specified symbol by label. Throws an exception if it's not found.
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///
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/// set: Adds the specified symbol to the list, or replaces it if it's already present.
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/// </summary>
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public Symbol this[string key] {
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get {
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return mSymbols[key];
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}
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set {
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mSymbols.TryGetValue(key, out Symbol oldValue);
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mSymbols[key] = value;
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if (oldValue != null) {
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ReplaceAddressTableEntry(oldValue, value);
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} else {
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AddAddressTableEntry(value);
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}
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}
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Gets the value associated with the label.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="key">Label to look up.</param>
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/// <param name="sym">Symbol, or null if not found.</param>
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/// <returns>True if the key is present, false otherwise.</returns>
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public bool TryGetValue(string key, out Symbol sym) {
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return mSymbols.TryGetValue(key, out sym);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Gets the value associated with the label, unless it's a variable.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="key">Label to look up.</param>
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/// <param name="sym">Symbol, or null if not found, or found but it's a variable.</param>
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/// <returns>True if the key is present, false otherwise.</returns>
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public bool TryGetNonVariableValue(string key, out Symbol sym) {
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bool found = mSymbols.TryGetValue(key, out sym);
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if (found && sym.IsVariable) {
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sym = null;
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found = false;
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}
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return found;
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Removes the specified symbol.
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/// </summary>
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public void Remove(Symbol sym) {
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mSymbols.Remove(sym.Label);
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RemoveAddressTableEntry(sym);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Adds a symbol to the address table. All affected addresses are updated. If an
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/// existing symbol is already present at an address, the new or old symbol will be
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/// selected in priority order.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="sym">Symbol to add.</param>
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private void AddAddressTableEntry(Symbol sym) {
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if (sym.IsConstant) {
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return;
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}
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if (sym.SymbolSource == Symbol.Source.Variable) {
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return;
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}
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if (sym is DefSymbol && ((DefSymbol)sym).MultiMask != null) {
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AddMultiMaskEntry((DefSymbol)sym);
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return;
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}
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bool doRead = true;
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bool doWrite = true;
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int width = 1;
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if (sym is DefSymbol) {
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DefSymbol defSym = (DefSymbol)sym;
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width = defSym.DataDescriptor.Length;
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if (defSym.Direction == DefSymbol.DirectionFlags.Read) {
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doWrite = false;
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} else if (defSym.Direction == DefSymbol.DirectionFlags.Write) {
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doRead = false;
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}
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}
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for (int i = 0; i < width; i++) {
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// See if there's already something here. If we reach the end of the
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// bank, wrap around.
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int addr = (sym.Value & 0xff0000) + ((sym.Value + i) & 0xffff);
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Symbol curSym;
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if (doRead) {
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mSymbolsByReadAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out curSym);
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mSymbolsByReadAddress[addr] = (curSym == null) ? sym :
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HighestPriority(sym, curSym);
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}
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if (doWrite) {
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mSymbolsByWriteAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out curSym);
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mSymbolsByWriteAddress[addr] = (curSym == null) ? sym :
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HighestPriority(sym, curSym);
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}
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}
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}
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private void AddMultiMaskEntry(DefSymbol defSym) {
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DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask multiMask = defSym.MultiMask;
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mMaskGroups.TryGetValue(multiMask, out MaskGroup group);
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if (group == null) {
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group = new MaskGroup(multiMask);
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mMaskGroups.Add(multiMask, group);
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}
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group.Add(defSym);
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}
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private static Symbol HighestPriority(Symbol sym1, Symbol sym2) {
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// First determinant is symbol source. User labels have highest priority, then
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// project symbols, then platform symbols, then auto labels.
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if ((int)sym1.SymbolSource < (int)sym2.SymbolSource) {
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return sym1;
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} else if ((int)sym1.SymbolSource > (int)sym2.SymbolSource) {
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return sym2;
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}
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// Same source. Are they platform symbols?
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if (sym1.SymbolSource == Symbol.Source.Platform) {
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// Sort by file load order. Symbols from files loaded later, which will have
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// a higher ordinal, have priority.
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int lo1 = ((DefSymbol)sym1).LoadOrdinal;
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int lo2 = ((DefSymbol)sym2).LoadOrdinal;
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if (lo1 > lo2) {
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return sym1;
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} else if (lo1 < lo2) {
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return sym2;
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}
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}
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// Same source, so this is e.g. two project symbol definitions that overlap. We
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// handle this by selecting whichever one was defined closer to the target address,
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// i.e. whichever one has the higher value.
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// TODO(someday): this mishandles bank wrap... do we care?
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if (sym1.Value > sym2.Value) {
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return sym1;
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} else if (sym1.Value < sym2.Value) {
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return sym2;
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}
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// In the absence of anything better, we select them alphabetically. (If they have
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// the same name, value, and source, there's not much to distinguish them anyway.)
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if (Asm65.Label.LABEL_COMPARER.Compare(sym1.Label, sym2.Label) < 0) {
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return sym1;
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} else {
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return sym2;
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}
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Replaces an entry in the address table. Must be called AFTER the by-label list
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/// has been updated.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="oldSym">Symbol being replaced.</param>
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/// <param name="newSym">New symbol.</param>
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private void ReplaceAddressTableEntry(Symbol oldSym, Symbol newSym) {
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RemoveAddressTableEntry(oldSym);
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AddAddressTableEntry(newSym);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Removes an entry from the address table. Must be called AFTER the by-label list
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/// has been updated.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="sym">Symbol to remove.</param>
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private void RemoveAddressTableEntry(Symbol sym) {
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// Easiest thing to do is just regenerate the table. Since we don't track
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// constants or variables, we can just ignore those.
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if (sym.IsConstant) {
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return;
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}
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if (sym.SymbolSource == Symbol.Source.Variable) {
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return;
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}
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if (sym.SymbolSource == Symbol.Source.User || sym.SymbolSource == Symbol.Source.Auto) {
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// These have a width of 1 and can't overlap with anything meaningful... even
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// if there's a project symbol for the address, it won't be used, because it's
|
|
// an in-file address. So we can just remove the entry.
|
|
//
|
|
// Note we do this *a lot* when the fancier auto labels are enabled, because we
|
|
// generate plain labels and then replace them with annotated labels.
|
|
mSymbolsByReadAddress.Remove(sym.Value);
|
|
mSymbolsByWriteAddress.Remove(sym.Value);
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Removing a project/platform symbol requires re-evaluating the by-address table.
|
|
Debug.WriteLine("SymbolTable: regenerating table after removal of " + sym);
|
|
RegenerateAddressTable();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// <summary>
|
|
/// Regenerates the entire by-address table, from the contents of the by-label list.
|
|
/// </summary>
|
|
/// <remarks>
|
|
/// This is a little painful, but if a symbol gets removed we don't have a way to
|
|
/// restore lower-priority items. If this becomes a performance issue we can create
|
|
/// an ordered list of symbols at each address, but even with a few hundred symbols this
|
|
/// should take very little time.
|
|
/// </remarks>
|
|
private void RegenerateAddressTable() {
|
|
//Debug.WriteLine("SymbolTable: regenerating address table");
|
|
mSymbolsByReadAddress.Clear();
|
|
mSymbolsByWriteAddress.Clear();
|
|
|
|
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, Symbol> kvp in mSymbols) {
|
|
AddAddressTableEntry(kvp.Value);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// <summary>
|
|
/// Searches the table for symbols with matching address values. Ignores constants and
|
|
/// variables.
|
|
/// </summary>
|
|
/// <param name="addr">Address to find.</param>
|
|
/// <returns>First matching symbol found, or null if nothing matched.</returns>
|
|
public Symbol FindNonVariableByAddress(int addr, OpDef.MemoryEffect effect) {
|
|
bool tryRead, tryWrite;
|
|
if (effect == OpDef.MemoryEffect.Read) {
|
|
tryRead = true;
|
|
tryWrite = false;
|
|
} else if (effect == OpDef.MemoryEffect.Write) {
|
|
tryRead = false;
|
|
tryWrite = true;
|
|
} else if (effect == OpDef.MemoryEffect.ReadModifyWrite ||
|
|
effect == OpDef.MemoryEffect.None) {
|
|
tryRead = tryWrite = true;
|
|
} else {
|
|
Debug.Assert(false);
|
|
return null;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Symbol sym = null;
|
|
if (tryRead) {
|
|
mSymbolsByReadAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out sym);
|
|
}
|
|
if (tryWrite && sym == null) {
|
|
mSymbolsByWriteAddress.TryGetValue(addr, out sym);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (sym == null) {
|
|
// Nothing matched, check the match groups.
|
|
foreach (KeyValuePair<DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask, MaskGroup> kvp in mMaskGroups) {
|
|
DefSymbol.MultiAddressMask multiMask = kvp.Key;
|
|
if ((addr & multiMask.CompareMask) == multiMask.CompareValue) {
|
|
MaskGroup group = kvp.Value;
|
|
DefSymbol defSym = kvp.Value.Find(addr, tryRead, tryWrite);
|
|
if (defSym != null) {
|
|
sym = defSym;
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return sym;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public override string ToString() {
|
|
return "SymbolTable: " + mSymbols.Count + " by label, " +
|
|
mSymbolsByReadAddress.Count + " by addr(r), " +
|
|
mSymbolsByWriteAddress.Count + " by addr(w), " +
|
|
mMaskGroups.Count + " mask groups";
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|